Infamous last words

Posted by Thersites on UTC 2016-06-19 06:54.

Whispers from the tube

Some years ago I succumbed for a few weeks to the cheerful hobby of
collecting 'last words'. That phase didn't last long: the really interesting,
perceptive or amusing last words are at best scarcely verifiable, but
more usually quite obviously made up to fit the moment.

The game 'Last Breath Whispers' also leaves much scope for mishearing
and misunderstanding, all gurgles and croaks resolved and improved in
the mind of the hearer. Steve Jobs is supposed to have said 'Wow! Wow!
Wow!' as he shuffled off his coil. Many fanbois think this utterance remarkably deep,
indicating an immediate entry into Heaven that deservedly bypassed the purgatorial formalities that others have to suffer.
However, we Windows users suspect – hope – it was 'Ow! Ow! Ow!'.

Modern medicine cares little for last words, preferring to have the
corpse-to-be well out of it – on a 'pathway' the doctors call it; downhill and over a cliff in the patient's experience – leaving no time for
grumbling, bothering busy staff and upsetting fellow patients.

If you wait until this point to express your last words you will be disappointed.
You will
have tubes in every orifice and your dentures will have found their
way into the bag marked 'Patient's Belongings'
weeks before. Since your carers have been denying you fluids for days your
tongue will be scraping noiselessly against the sandpaper of your palate and will be
useless for communication. No dentals, no sibilants, no labials, the odd fricative and otherwise just grunts and wheezes.

Christopher Hitchens said he would stay off the terminal meds so that he could
experience dying directly. There is so much wrong with this idea that
I'm not going to discuss it further, except to say that whatever last
words he managed were probably the same as those of Steve Jobs.

Be prepared, you never know

Although friends, relatives, loved ones and medical professionals are
bad enough at mangling your last words, I certainly don't want to leave
the task of recording my last words to the first traffic policeman on
the scene:

The driver of the Fiat 500 stated that 'I wish I had followed the
Highway Code and observed the three step rule (mirror, indicator,
mirror) before pulling out into the fast lane'.

No I will bloody well not blow into your bloody tube!

That bastard in the red Audi – that showed him! I hope he's dead!

So give some thought to your last words. You really should not leave
them in the hands of fate, the medical profession or passing helpers. Take no chances, I
say, and write them down. Written takes precedence over oral, leaving you free to express yourself
more freely at the hour of departure, when your spirit is 'pluming for flight'.

Be prepared: in order to ensure accuracy of expression at that critical
point in life, death, I now carry a 'last words card' in my wallet.

In case of death, these are my last words:

The words themselves change from time to time as my mood changes. Currently I have:

I am an atheist. May the Pope, the Lord High Moderater of the Kirk of
Scotland and that thicko wimp Justin Welby all rot in Hell!

Don't forget to sign it. Oh, and always make sure that there is only one
card in existence at any one time. Statements from long ago that are
still kicking around could also lead to misunderstandings: 'I hope I'll
meet that Jimmy Savile', 'I did not have sex with that woman'.

Profanities are best avoided. They have their place in some situations
but death is not one of them: polite gatherings will never get to hear
your last words. Teasers in a trembling hand are risky: 'Madeleine
McCann was...' may lead to defaced headstones and repeated exhumations.

Last words matter

The brutal murder of the Member of Parliament for the Batley and Spen
constituency, Jo Cox, showed us once again how important last words are
to those left behind. The MP had been stabbed, shot and kicked multiple
times. Her assistant, Fazila Aswat, was trying to get her to stand up
(that must be in the same First Aid manual that advises aiders to slap the patient's face and tell them to keep awake).

We are told that her last words as heard by her assistant and retailed
to the press by her father, Ghulam Maniyar, were: 'My pain is too much'.

Leaving all consideration of his lack of idiomatic language skills to one side,
I'm not too sure that Ghulam is a terribly reliable conduit for
last words, despite being very quick off the mark to offer himself as the
spokesman for his daughter – which is in itself rather odd behaviour.

Most news outlets, realising that no English speaker would say that,
reworked it into something more idiomatic, which shows their lack of reporting integrity.

Given Ghulam's shadybackground in the Muslim burial business we would
prefer a more reliable witness. We shall have to wait until Fazila is
able (=allowed) to tell us what was really said.

Offensive? Absolutely!

Is all this posthumous humour involving Batley's recently dead MP
tasteless, even offensive?

Probably, but nowhere near as tasteless as ignoring the rank odour that
rises from the political sewer that runs through the town of Batley.
Nowhere near as offensive to the senses as the town's new viral video
celebrity, who, we learn,
never bothered to keep records of who was
shoved into which overflowing hole in his 'cemetery', or even to follow such
infidel practices as keeping accounts.

Consequences? So far, none.
And after this latest grandstanding over the dead MP's last words, he is probably
even more untouchable.

So when you are weeping over the pathos of Ghulam's interview, remember to keep a tight hold on your nose. You're in Batley now.